The Star Late Edition

Eskom warns of power shortage

Load shedding a possibilit­y as maintenanc­e is conducted

- Londiwe Buthelezi

THE NEW year is off to an uncertain start, with an irregular electricit­y supply the last problem the domestic economy needs. As most companies returned to full production yesterday on the first day of work for many, Eskom warned that there was a risk of power shortages for the rest of the month.

The power utility said it had started using its emergency reserves to meet the escalating power demand. Eskom spokeswoma­n Hilary Joffe said some power generating units had tripped and others were not performing well.

“The system has been very volatile. There are issues with (wet) coal at some stations because of rain. Others are unable to perform at very high temperatur­es,” Joffe said.

The utility held meetings yesterday with its large customers, including municipali­ties, asking them to decrease power use and switch off as many appliances as possible.

Joffe said yesterday had been a tough day and Eskom expected the rest of the week, if not the whole month, to be equally challengin­g.

She said the utility was, however, not warning of load shedding for now and would do its utmost not to resort to this.

“We are not saying we are about to do it now, but we are warning that the risk is there if the demand does not go down. We are pleading to everyone to switch off. We are running on emergency reserves and it’s not even peak time yet,” she said.

To bridge the gap yesterday, Eskom began using the opencycle gas turbines in the Western Cape, which Joffe said were extremely expensive to run.

It also activated its pump storage scheme and used all the power available from independen­t power producers.

Joffe said some of Eskom’s large customers had been helpful in trying to stabilise demand. Eskom implemente­d its agreement with BHP Billiton to cut off its Kwazulu-natal aluminium smelter.

The utility said all households and businesses needed to cut their power use by 5 percent to stabilise the system.

We are not saying we are about to do load shedding, but the risk is there if the demand does not go down.

Cornelis van der Waal, the electricit­y analyst programme manager at Frost & Sullivan, said the threat of load shedding had been imminent for some time, and some businesses that had special arrangemen­ts with Eskom had been enduring load shedding for months.

“The problem stems from 1998 when the government refused to invest in new power generation. It doesn’t come as a surprise. We all knew that the system has been constraine­d for some time now,” he said.

Van der Waal said there would be an impact on the economy but it could not be determined as the extent of possible load shedding was not known.

Tony Twine, a senior economist at Econometri­x, said the implicatio­ns of Eskom’s warnings were difficult to assess at this stage because load shedding remained a risk rather than a reality.

Twine said it was likely that Eskom did not yet know the probabilit­y of load shedding occurring as it depended on future demand as well as supply.

“I don’t believe there can be (load shedding). In a threat you need to know the outcome and the probabilit­y of the outcome. The outcome is still unknown. We don’t know if it would be local or regional,” he said.

Eskom regularly runs maintenanc­e on its units during the summer season. Joffe said at the moment, 13 percent of its capacity was allocated for this scheduled maintenanc­e.

Last year the utility warned of possible power constraint­s until the commission­ing of the first unit of the Medupi power station in 2013.

Eskom chief executive Brian Dames, in his last state of energy update in November, said the risk in summer was that there was not the capacity to meet demand, because it might not have enough reserves during the maintenanc­e season. This usually starts in September and ends in May.

In the past, Dames has said that Eskom’s power plants were aging and required more maintenanc­e to improve reliabilit­y.

Eskom’s warning comes just weeks after the utility posted a stellar profit, which it attributed to big tariff increases.

But Gary van Staden, an analyst at NKC, said although the parastatal made a large profit, it could not reinvest this in a few months.

“If they don’t have a clear plan on what to do to reinvest that profit to increase power capacity, then that would be the problem. But certainly this is not good news for the ordinary consumer,” he said.

The Cape Chamber of Commerce said while it appreciate­d the fact that Eskom had contacted it, the chamber was not happy with the lack of informatio­n provided.

“Basic scenario planning should be in place. For the country’s power supply to possibly be prejudiced in this way, at this time, and this economic climate, is just not acceptable,” said Michael Bagraim, the president of the chamber.

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